Origins In the 1870s, landscape architect
Frederick Law Olmsted envisioned a
greenbelt across the Bronx, consisting of parks and parkways that would align with existing geography. However, in 1877, the city declined to act upon his plan. Around the same time,
New York Herald editor
John Mullaly pushed for the creation of parks in New York City, particularly lauding the
Van Cortlandt and Pell families' properties in the western and eastern Bronx respectively. He formed the
New York Park Association in November 1881. There were objections to the system, which would apparently be too far from Manhattan, in addition to precluding development on the parks' sites. However, newspapers and prominent lobbyists, who supported such a park system, were able to petition the bill into the
New York State Senate, and later, the
New York State Assembly (the legislature's
lower house). In June 1884, Governor
Grover Cleveland signed the
New Parks Act into law, authorizing the creation of the park system. The system consisted of three parkways and six parks, with
Bronx Park at the center of the system. Bronx Park was connected to
Pelham Bay Park in the east via Pelham Parkway; to
Van Cortlandt Park in the northwest via
Mosholu Parkway; and to
Crotona Park in the south via Crotona Parkway. There were no direct connections to Claremont Park and
St. Mary's Park, the other two parks in the system. When New York City boomed after World War I and the Bronx became part of the city and neighborhoods, highways, and parks built up, the Pelham Parkway became a commuter route. Construction on today's Pelham Parkway started in 1935 under parks commissioner
Robert Moses and was completed in 1937. In the 1950s and 1960s, Moses wanted to upgrade the parkway to a
freeway and extend it to the
Henry Hudson Parkway in the Inwood neighborhood of
Manhattan. It would also connect to proposed limited-access upgrade and extension of the
Mosholu Parkway and a large interchange with
I-95 and a never built portion of
I-895 at the current interchange with I-95 in Pelham Bay. Due to a growing opposition to highway improvements in the city partially fueled by opposition to the construction of the
Cross Bronx Expressway, only the section from Shore Road to Stillwell Avenue was upgraded to a freeway.
Present In 2010, many trees were cut down along the Pelham Parkway so that NYSDOT could install a guardrail in response to an uptick in accidents. While there was local opposition to this, the project was carried out, and the parks department vowed to plant 200 new trees along the parkway. ==Major intersections==